Snowden leaks ‘have a grave impact on US national defense’ – Pentagon report

​Classified intelligence documents provided to the media by former United States government contractor Edward Snowden “will have a grave impact on US national defense,” according to a previously unpublished Pentagon assessment.

The highly-redacted December 2013 report on how Mr. Snowden’s
compromise of secret documents affects the Department of Defense
was obtained by The Guardian newspaper this week after filing
Freedom of Information Act request with the US government, and
published on Thursday alongside an analysis by investigative
journalist Jason Leopold.

According to the DOD report, “the scope of the compromised
knowledge related to US intelligence capabilities is
staggering.”

Two days after Snowden revealed himself on June 9, 2013 to be the
source of those documents, the US Defense Intelligence Agency’s
Information Review Task Force-2 (IRTF-2) was assembled to assess
the true scope of the compromise. Nearly a year later, however,
those documents are still being used regularly as source material
in an ongoing stream of national security stories.

The December report from the Pentagon is absent specific details
about how Snowden’s compromise affected the NSA or other agencies
of the US intelligence community, but nevertheless concludes that
a staggering amount of information was taken by Snowden which are
thought to impact national defense.

“It should be noted that SIGINT-specific equities,” or
matters involving the collection of signals intelligence,
“are not addressed in this report; NSA is reviewing those
separately,” it reads.

Reports published throughout the last year have suggested that
Snowden, while employed as an NSA contractor, took anywhere from
several thousand to 1.7 million classified files — a fraction of
which have been used as primary source documents for Pulitzer
Prize-winning articles concerning America’s vast surveillance
apparatus and how the SIGINT collection has allowed the US
intelligence community to collect tremendous amounts of digital
data indiscriminately and in bulk.

Elsewhere in the December report, the DIA defined documents that
have been “disclosed” by Mr. Snowden as having been
“made available to the public via the media, or to a foreign
adversary,” rekindling the notion brought up during last
year’s military trial of Army leaker Chelsea Manning in which the
government put national security reporting on par with aiding the
enemy.

Much of the latest assessment obtained by Leopold for the
Guardian is heavily redacted — almost all, in fact — but the
journalist acknowledged that its contents have been cited by
high-ranking lawmakers within the US intelligence community more
than once since its release late last year.

"This report confirms my greatest fears — Snowden’s real acts
of betrayal place America’s military men and women at greater
risk,” Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Michigan) said in a statement in
January. “Snowden’s actions are likely to have lethal
consequences for our troops in the field," he said.